Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett

Bits of different varieties are hypothesized to have been used for horses for at least 4000 of the 6000 years of domestication. However, the focus of previous studies regarding bits have mainly been on physical injuries caused by pressure points, effects of different shapes and their influence on...

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Autor principal: Östberg, Alexandra
Formato: First cycle, G2E
Lenguaje:sueco
sueco
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15813/
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author Östberg, Alexandra
author_browse Östberg, Alexandra
author_facet Östberg, Alexandra
author_sort Östberg, Alexandra
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Bits of different varieties are hypothesized to have been used for horses for at least 4000 of the 6000 years of domestication. However, the focus of previous studies regarding bits have mainly been on physical injuries caused by pressure points, effects of different shapes and their influence on the horse. Limited focus has been put on the temperature of the bit and its impact, although this aspect affects many horses daily. The present study aimed to investigate and compare horses’ responses of both facial expressions and body language when being bridled with warm respective cold bits. The study was performed in April in Sweden with an air temperature of 5°C. It was performed on ten Icelandic horses and behaviours were divided into positive and negative expressions. Facial expressions and posture of the head were analyzed as proportion of time, while body languages and full eye blinks were analyzed as frequencies of observation occasions. The results suggested that the horses, on average, seemed to prefer warm bits of 35°C, roughly equivalent with the temperature of their mouth, over cold bits with a temperature of 6°C. This was reflected in a higher proportion of time correlated with positive behaviours when being bridled with a warm bit compared to a cold bit. The results also suggested that a cold bit was perceived as more uncomfortable than not being bridled, while a warm bit, and its connection to perceived discomfort between being bridled and not, was less clear. The effect of the bit temperature needs further investigation in future studies. Based on present study, one could speculate that horses might accept or like warmer bits more than cold bits. This could potentially affect initial responses to training and handling as evasive behaviours could be eliminated.
format First cycle, G2E
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Swedish
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publishDate 2020
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spelling RepoSLU158132020-07-14T01:02:36Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15813/ Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett Östberg, Alexandra Animal ecology Bits of different varieties are hypothesized to have been used for horses for at least 4000 of the 6000 years of domestication. However, the focus of previous studies regarding bits have mainly been on physical injuries caused by pressure points, effects of different shapes and their influence on the horse. Limited focus has been put on the temperature of the bit and its impact, although this aspect affects many horses daily. The present study aimed to investigate and compare horses’ responses of both facial expressions and body language when being bridled with warm respective cold bits. The study was performed in April in Sweden with an air temperature of 5°C. It was performed on ten Icelandic horses and behaviours were divided into positive and negative expressions. Facial expressions and posture of the head were analyzed as proportion of time, while body languages and full eye blinks were analyzed as frequencies of observation occasions. The results suggested that the horses, on average, seemed to prefer warm bits of 35°C, roughly equivalent with the temperature of their mouth, over cold bits with a temperature of 6°C. This was reflected in a higher proportion of time correlated with positive behaviours when being bridled with a warm bit compared to a cold bit. The results also suggested that a cold bit was perceived as more uncomfortable than not being bridled, while a warm bit, and its connection to perceived discomfort between being bridled and not, was less clear. The effect of the bit temperature needs further investigation in future studies. Based on present study, one could speculate that horses might accept or like warmer bits more than cold bits. This could potentially affect initial responses to training and handling as evasive behaviours could be eliminated. 2020-07-07 First cycle, G2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf sv https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15813/11/Ostberg_A_200607.pdf Östberg, Alexandra, 2020. Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett : en experimentell studie. First cycle, G2E. Uppsala: (VH) > Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-880.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-15813 swe
spellingShingle Animal ecology
Östberg, Alexandra
Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett
title Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett
title_full Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett
title_fullStr Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett
title_full_unstemmed Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett
title_short Hästars (Equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett
title_sort hästars (equus caballus) beteenderespons på varma respektive kalla bett
topic Animal ecology
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15813/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15813/